FF2012: 'Dredd 3D'

It took until 2012 to get 2000 AD right

"Drokk it!"

I may never have seen a non-horror film as relentlessly, brutally, and crowd-pleasingly violent as this skin-tight adaptation of the long-running British comic character, who since 1977 has been Judge, jury, and executioner to the perps and citizens of sprawling, tower-blockaded Mega-City One. As for this film version? It's bloody fucking brilliant.

And I do mean bloody. (Fun fact: Think you're the biggest Dredd fan around? I doubt it: I lost my virginity in 1982 while wearing a Judge Death T-shirt I'd purchased from London's famed Forbidden Planet comic shop just days before. Top that.)

Strangely, the comic that first unleashed the Judge Dredd character, 2000 AD, never really caught on in the States until the advent of (duh) the internet, and it still lags far behind even Marvel and D.C.'s weakest offerings in terms of American sales. Which is interesting, since from the start the series has been one long, hyper-convoluted riff on totalitarianism, the police state, fascism, and the grey land between law, order, and madness. In the meantime, the U.K has somehow allowed itself to become the most surveilled Kingdom/Parliamentary Democracy in the world. Head's up, Yanks: you're No. 2.

Director Pete Travis and writer Alex Garland have nailed the core aspects of the perpetually scowling Dredd's universe with a gritty simplicity. There's not an ounce of fat on Garland's script -- unlike the misbegotten 1995 flatliner that miscast an overbulked Sly Stallone in the role -- and, as in several other film playing FF2012 this year, nearly all the action takes place in one vast tower block.

You can almost hear Judge Dredd's (Karl Urban, doing terrific work under the omnipresent Judge's helmet) grimace creak like old leather as he's saddled with a rookie mutant Academy of Justice Judge-plebe, Anderson (Olivia Thirlby, equal to the task at hand), a female no less, with psychic abilities.

It's training day in Mega-City One -- a hazy, muggy megalopolis that stretches from NY to D.C. and the lone refuge of humanity post-nuclear doom -- and the pair end up at Peach Trees, a 200-story residential tower controlled by the bloodthirsty Ma-Ma (Lena Headey, stone-cold evil incarnate) and her gang. They, in turn, control the supply and demand of the new drug in town, "Slo-Mo," which slows the user's perceptions to 1% normal time. Sounds like fun, except when you're plummeting those aforementioned 200 stories.

From here on out it's simple cat-and-mouse between Ma-Ma's legions and the Judges, but Travis and Garland keep your eyes glued to the action onscreen and have you rooting for the (let's face it) fascist tool Dredd and his scary-smart partner throughout. It's a win-win situation for both the audience (who probably weren't expecting this level of mayhem) and the (bound to be) Judge Dredd franchise, which kickstarts like a 20,000 volts to the heart, or a burst from Dredd's Lawgiver MK-2. Absolutely, 100% kickass. Now would someone please get busy on the Tank Girl do-over, please?

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KEYWORDS FOR THIS POST

FF2012, Dredd 3D, Karl Urban, Alex Garland, Fantastic Fest 2012

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